Waynesville, North Carolina

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Waynesville, North Carolina
Overlooking the town of Waynesville
Overlooking the town of Waynesville
Official seal of Waynesville, North Carolina
Seal
Location in North Carolina
Location in North Carolina
Country United States
State North Carolina
County Haywood County
Incorporated 1871
Government
 - Mayor Henry Foy
Area
 - City  7.8 sq mi (20.1 km²)
 - Land  7.8 sq mi (20.1 km²)
 - Water  0 sq mi (0 km²)
Elevation  2,752 ft (839 m)
Population (2006)
 - City 10,000 (est.)
 - Density 1,191.8/sq mi (460.2/km²)
Time zone Eastern (UTC-5)
 - Summer (DST) EDT (UTC-4)
Website: Town of Waynesville

Waynesville is the largest town in Haywood County, North Carolina, United States of America and is its county seatGR6. It is located about 30 miles or 50 km southwest of Asheville in the Great Smoky Mountains. As of the 2000 census, the town had a total population of 9,232 with an estimate of 10,000 as of late 2006. Waynesville is located just outside the Pisgah National Forest and is close to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park and the Blue Ridge Parkway. Waynesville and Haywood County are part of the four-county Asheville MSA (Metropolitan Statistical Area), currently the 5th largest metropolitan area in North Carolina.

Contents

[edit] Geography

Waynesville is located at 35°28′60″N, 82°59′40″W (35.483226, -82.994511)GR1.

According to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of 20.1 km² (7.8 mi²), all land.

Most of the town of Waynesville lies between 2500 and 3000 feet (750~900m) above sea level, and is located in a valley among 6000-foot (1800m) mountain peaks. A USGS survey marker at the old Haywood County Courthouse in downtown Waynesville lists the altitude as 2752 feet above sea level.

[edit] Demographics

As of the censusGR2 of 2000, there were 9,232 people, 4,106 households, and 2,545 families residing in the town. The population density was 459.9/km² (1,191.8/mi²). There were 4,761 housing units at an average density of 237.2/km² (614.6/mi²). The racial makeup of the town was 94.42% White, 3.31% African American, 0.54% Native American, 0.16% Asian, 0.08% Pacific Islander, 0.76% from other races, and 0.73% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 2.01% of the population.

There were 4,106 households out of which 23.2% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 45.0% were married couples living together, 13.1% had a female householder with no husband present, and 38.0% were non-families. 34.0% of all households were made up of individuals and 16.0% had someone living alone who was 65 years or older.

As of late 2006 the town of Waynesville government estimated the population at 10,000.

[edit] History

Downtown Waynesville around 1900.
Downtown Waynesville around 1900.

The Town of Waynesville was founded in 1809 by Colonel Robert Love, an American Revolutionary War soldier. He donated land for the courthouse, jail, and public square, and named the town after his former commander in the war, General "Mad" Anthony Wayne.

Waynesville also has a connection to another war. With news of General Robert E. Lee's surrender traveling slowly, the American Civil War continued in Western North Carolina. The final shots of that war, east of the Mississippi River, were fired near Sulphur Springs and General James Martin surrendered honorably on May 9, 1865 (See The "Battle" of Waynesville below.)

The Town of Waynesville was incorporated in 1871. In July 1995 the Towns of Hazelwood and Waynesville merged into one community and continued to grow with a population today of almost 10,000.

[edit] Frog Level

The Waynesville Train Depot in Frog Level sometime in the late 1890s.
The Waynesville Train Depot in Frog Level sometime in the late 1890s.

Waynesville began to see development after arrival of the railroad in 1884. The agricultural, lumber and tourism industries in Waynesville and Haywood County began to thrive as access to the west was opened up.

The area of Waynesville located along Richland Creek, northwest and down hill from Main Street, was where the railroad tracks were laid. Until this time the area had been essentially a swampland, with a few scattered buildings but no major development. Once the depot was built and the train arrived, the area soon came to be known as Frog Level was developed. Frog Level was so named by the local community because of its low-lying location along Richland Creek, the "frog level" when the area flooded.

Downtown and the nearby Frog Level commercial centers of Waynesville continued to be the central focus for social life, transportation, and wholesale and retail businesses through the 1940s. Businesses in the Frog Level area in the 1930s and 1940s included hardware stores, farm supplies, coal sales, auto dealers and garages, furniture stores, wholesale groceries, warehouses and lumber companies, all businesses dependent on the railroad. However, as the automobile began to change the primary mode of transportation for most residents, the railroad declined in importance. The last passenger train arrived in Waynesville in 1949, and freight trains pass through Frog Level twice daily, with most trains continuing on to Sylva.

By the 1980s the railroad in Waynesville had been integrated into the Southern Railway Company system. The first depot burned in 1900, but it was soon replaced with another depot that remained standing until 1987.

New property owners within the district have begun a new wave of renovation efforts, and Frog Level is once again beginning to serve as a commercial part of the Town.

[edit] Popular Culture

  • Actor Gig Young, whose real name is Byron Elsworth Barr is buried in the Green Hill Cemetery.

[edit] Neighborhoods

Downtown Waynesville in Summer.
Downtown Waynesville in Summer.
Town of Waynesville Municipal Center
Town of Waynesville Municipal Center
  • Downtown - The primary retail business center of the town, downtown Waynesville is now home to art galleries, cafes and restaurants, shops, banks, doctors, and the town government/administration buildings.
  • Frog Level - The historic district whose name came about because of frequent flooding of Richland Creek. In the 70s and 80s it was known as a seedy part of downtown, mainly due to a now-closed biker bar called The Tap Room. In recent years, the revitalization of Main Street has spread down into this area. A mural in the area depicts a frog sitting on a level. The historic Murphy Branch of the old Western North Carolina Railroad runs through Frog Level and still carries freight rail traffic from Norfolk Southern Railway which now owns the line.
  • Hazelwood - Due to financial troubles, this once independent town ceased to exist and was annexed by Waynesville in 1995
  • Laurel Ridge - The Laurel Ridge neighborhood is connected to a country club of the same name, and features a golf course, pool, tennis courts, and upscale mountain homes.
  • West Waynesville - The once industrial part of town. There are now plans to demolish the now vacant Dayco plant and build a large shopping center which will include a Wal-Mart Super Center, Staples and a Home Depot.
  • Russ Avenue - The newer business district, which features restaurants, retail stores, auto dealerships, banks, grocery stores, and the like. Russ Avenue is the most traveled surface street in Haywood County.

[edit] The "Battle" of Waynesville

Waynesville was the scene of the last and perhaps most unusual skirmish in the eastern theater of the American Civil War. On May 6, 1865, Union Colonel William C. Bartlett's 2nd North Carolina (Federal) Mounted Infantry were raiding, pilagiing, burning homes in the area and were attacked at White Sulphur Springs (east of Waynesville) by a detachment of Confederates from the Thomas Legion of Cherokee and Highlanders, who had been summoned for help by locals. East of the Mississippi Thomas' Legion fired "The Last Shot" of the Civil War in White Sulphur Springs, North Carolina. The Legion consisted of white and Cherokee Indian soldiers who had served under Jubal A. Early during the Shenandoah Valley Campaigns of 1864, but had been sent back to their native North Carolina mountains to engage in guerrilla warfare against pro-Union bushwhackers.

The disoriented Union soldiers retreated into Waynesville, and on the evening of May 6 remaining elements of the Thomas Legion surrounded the town. The Cherokees lit numerous bonfires on the ridges above the town and engaged in war chants in an effort to intimidate the Federals. Like the biblical story of Gideon, the Legion created the illusion of entrapping the Federals with superior forces. Furthermore, on May 9, 1865, the Confederate commanders Gen. James Green Martin and Col. William Holland Thomas (for whom the Legion was named) negotiated a "surrender" in exchange for their soldiers' right to keep their arms for self-defense against the roving bushwhackers. These commanders had been made aware that Generals Robert E. Lee and Joseph E. Johnston had already capitulated, and that continued hostilities would prove pointless.

[edit] Transportation

Waynesville is serviced by two or more freight trains daily via the Norfolk Southern Railway and is connected to Interstate 40 and the rest of Southwestern North Carolina via the Great Smoky Mountains Expressway giving it easy access to Knoxville, Tennessee and Asheville. There is no airport in Haywood County mostly due to its close proximity to the Asheville Regional Airport and Knoxville's McGhee Tyson Airport. Asheville is about a 30 minute drive east, Knoxville is an hour and a half to the west.

[edit] Educational institustions

[edit] Waynesville Watershed

Waynesville’s watershed is located southwest of the town and covers an area of 8,400 acres (13.1 square miles) of town-owned land on the headwaters of Allens Creek making it much larger than the town itself (7.9 square miles.) Tributary streams within the watershed flow into the Waynesville Reservoir, a 50-acre man-made lake created by a dam on Allens Creek. The reservoir and surrounding watershed are classified by the State of North Carolina as WS-1. This classification is the state’s most stringent and forbids development within the watershed boundary.

[edit] Political Controversies

Waynesville attracted national media attention in 2005 when Chan Chandler, the pastor of East Waynesville Baptist Church, expelled nine church members because they had voted for John Kerry, the Democratic candidate in the 2004 United States presidential election. Forty other members of the church resigned in protest and the pastor was eventually forced to step down under pressure from his congregation and other members of the community. USA Today Story

The town also received repeated media attention throughout the 1990s due to a lawsuit by the ACLU and local atheist Richard Suhre to remove a display of the Ten Commandments from the Haywood County courthouse. The lawsuit was dismissed on several occasions, and formally ended with Suhre's death in 1999.

[edit] Trivia

  • The largest manufacturer of magnesium sulfate (Epsom Salt) in North America, Giles Chemical, is headquartered in the Frog Level area of Waynesville.

[edit] External links


Flag of North Carolina
State of North Carolina
Raleigh (capital)
Topics

History | Geography | North Carolinians

Regions

Mountain | Foothills | Piedmont | Metro Charlotte | Piedmont Triad | Triangle | Sandhills | Coastal Plain | Inner Banks | Outer Banks

Major cities

Charlotte | Durham | Fayetteville | Greensboro | Wilmington | Winston‑Salem

Cities over
15,000
population

Albemarle | Apex | Asheboro | Asheville | Burlington | Carrboro | Cary | Clemmons | Chapel Hill | Concord | Eden | Elizabeth City | Garner | Gastonia | Goldsboro | Greenville | Havelock | Henderson | Hickory | High Point | Huntersville | Jacksonville | Kannapolis | Kernersville | Kinston | Laurinburg | Lenoir | Lexington | Lumberton | Matthews | Mint Hill | Monroe | Mooresville | Morganton | New Bern | Reidsville | Roanoke Rapids | Rocky Mount | Salisbury | Sanford | Shelby | Statesville | Thomasville | Wake Forest | Wilson

Counties

Alamance | Alexander | Alleghany | Anson | Ashe | Avery | Beaufort | Bertie | Bladen | Brunswick | Buncombe | Burke | Cabarrus | Caldwell | Camden | Carteret | Caswell | Catawba | Chatham | Cherokee | Chowan | Clay | Cleveland | Columbus | Craven | Cumberland | Currituck | Dare | Davidson | Davie | Duplin | Durham | Edgecombe | Forsyth | Franklin | Gaston | Gates | Graham | Granville | Greene | Guilford | Halifax | Harnett | Haywood | Henderson | Hertford | Hoke | Hyde | Iredell | Jackson | Johnston | Jones | Lee | Lenoir | Lincoln | Macon | Madison | Martin | McDowell | Mecklenburg | Mitchell | Montgomery | Moore | Nash | New Hanover | Northampton | Onslow | Orange | Pamlico | Pasquotank | Pender | Perquimans | Person | Pitt | Polk | Randolph | Richmond | Robeson | Rockingham | Rowan | Rutherford | Sampson | Scotland | Stanly | Stokes | Surry | Swain | Transylvania | Tyrrell | Union | Vance | Wake | Warren | Washington | Watauga | Wayne | Wilkes | Wilson | Yadkin | Yancey